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Studies the socio-economic effects of language policies with a special focus on inclusion, participation, and justice
Offers a truly interdisciplinary perspective on the economic, political, philosophical, and sociolinguistic issues raised by the management of linguistic diversity
Presents findings that are relevant for decision-making on a national and international level
First book on linguistic justice from an economic perspective
Auteur
Michele Gazzola (1978) is a research fellow at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin in the Research Group "Economics and Language", as well as a research fellow at the Institute for ethnic studies (Intitut za narodnostna vpraanja) in Ljubljana, and a teaching fellow at the Università della Svizzera Italiana in Lugano. He is currently working on the research project Mobility and Inclusion in a Multilingual Europe (project MIME). His research areas include language policy and planning, the economics of languages, policy analysis, and multilingualism as a social phenomenon.
Torsten Templin (1986) is a research assistant at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. In 2012 he graduated in Mathematics. Since 2014 he is part of the EU financed MIME project (Mobility and Inclusion in a Multilingual Europe) and works on modeling the dynamics of language use and language policy evaluation. His research interests include language economics, applied mathematics and optimal control theory.
Bengt-Arne Wickström (1948) is guest professor at Andrássy University in Budapest. From 1992 until his retirement in 2013 he held the chair of public economics at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and before that chairs at Johannes-Kepler-Universität in Linz, Austria, and the University of Bergen, Norway. He is an honorary professor at Universidad de La Habana. His research is concentrated on economics and language, and he is currently (2014-2018) coordinating a research group working on the dynamics of language use as part of the EU-financed MIME project (Mobility and Inclusion in a Multilingual Europe) involving some 20 universities. In addition to language economics, his research interests include welfare economics, public-choice theory, and evolutionary approaches in economics.
Contenu
Introduction: An Economics Approach to Language Policy and Linguistic Justice.- Overview of Literature: Linguistic Justice - an Interdisciplinary Overview of the Literature.- Political and Philosophical Perspectives on Linguistic Justice: Justice in the Linguistic Environment.- Towards an Adaptive Approach to Linguistic Justice.- Language Proficiency and Migration.- The Myth of English as a Common Language in the EU, and Some of Its Political Consequences.- Economic Approaches to Language Policy and Linguistic Justice: The Case of Canadian Provinces.- Evidence from Catalonia.- Languages, Human Capital and Well-Being in Sub-Saharan Africa.- Linguistic Disenfranchisement and Labour Mobility in Europe.- Choosing Working Languages in a Multilingual Organization.- Sociolinguistic Views and Applications: The Assessment of Sociolinguistic Justice - Parameters and Models of Analysis.- Regulatory Environment, Linguistic Inequalities and New Opportunities for Hungarian Minority Interest Representation in Romania.- The Economic Value of Mastering Languages - the Case of Ethnically Mixed Areas in Slovenia.- Language and Translation Policies in Context of Urban Super-Diversity.- Language Policies for Migrants in Italy.- Esperanto and Linguistic Justice - an Empirical Response to Skeptics.